Quick Picks (TL;DR)
I spent three years recommending Microsoft Power Automate to clients simply because they were already in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. Then I watched those same clients hit its limits — clunky UI, spotty non-Microsoft connectors, and licensing gotchas that inflate the true cost. Here are the tools I reach for now:
- Zapier — best all-around replacement for teams that need reliable cross-app automation
- Make — best for multi-step, data-heavy workflows with a visual canvas
- Workato — best Power Automate alternative for mid-sized teams with enterprise-grade needs
- Tray.io — best for technical teams wanting enterprise automation without the Microsoft lock-in
- n8n — best for teams that want self-hosted, code-friendly automation at low cost
| Tool | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zapier | Non-Microsoft SaaS stacks | Yes (100 tasks/mo) | ~$20/mo (verify) | 6,000+ integrations |
| Make | Visual, data-heavy workflows | Yes (1,000 ops/mo) | ~$9/mo (verify) | Scenario canvas, iterators |
| Workato | Mid-market enterprise automation | No | ~$10,000/yr (verify) | AI-assisted recipe builder |
| Tray.io | Technical enterprise teams | No | Custom pricing (verify) | Low-code + full code mix |
| n8n | Developer-led small teams | Yes (self-host) | ~$24/mo cloud (verify) | Open-source, custom JS nodes |
Where Power Automate Falls Short
Power Automate makes perfect sense if your entire workflow lives inside Microsoft products — SharePoint, Teams, Outlook, Dynamics. In that narrow lane, it is deeply integrated and cost-effective, especially if your Microsoft 365 licence already includes the basic tier.
Outside that lane, the experience degrades quickly. When I tried to build a workflow that touched Salesforce, Slack, and a custom REST API for a consulting client, Power Automate required a premium connector licence for Salesforce, the Slack connector had a week-long authentication bug that Microsoft support acknowledged but could not fix, and the HTTP connector syntax for the custom API was more painful than it needed to be. The same workflow took me forty minutes in Make.
The other underrated frustration is the UI. Power Automate's flow builder feels like it was designed for IT administrators, not the operations managers and marketers who actually need to build automations daily. That friction adds up.
Zapier
Best for: teams migrating away from Microsoft's ecosystem
Zapier is the safest landing zone for teams leaving Power Automate because the app library is enormous and the reliability record is strong. In my experience, the first thing clients notice after switching is how fast they can connect new tools — what took twenty minutes in Power Automate's connector library takes three minutes in Zapier's search.
For teams that were using Power Automate primarily for email-triggered workflows, form responses, and CRM updates, Zapier's multi-step Zaps handle all of those cleanly with less configuration friction.
Pros
- Widest app coverage in the market at 6,000+ integrations
- Team collaboration features: shared Zap libraries, roles, and workspaces
- Highly reliable with good error alerting
- Tables and Interfaces extend into lightweight data and form use cases
Cons
- Task-based pricing becomes expensive at high volume
- Complex branching and data transformation are less elegant than Make
- No self-hosted option for data-sensitive environments
Who should skip it: High-volume data processing teams where per-task pricing would be punishing, or teams that need advanced logic like loops and iterators.
Make (formerly Integromat)
Best for: replacing Power Automate's data transformation and multi-step flows
Make is the Power Automate replacement I recommend most often for operations-heavy teams. The visual scenario canvas is genuinely intuitive once you spend an hour with it, and the iterator and aggregator modules let you process arrays and batch data in ways that would require workarounds in either Power Automate or Zapier.
I rebuilt a client's daily inventory sync — which had been running unreliably in Power Automate for months — in Make in about two hours. It has run cleanly every day since.
Pros
- Visual branching canvas is more intuitive than Power Automate's flow builder
- Operations-based pricing scales more predictably than task-based models
- Strong HTTP and JSON support for non-native API integrations
- Robust error handling with dedicated error routes
Cons
- Learning curve for non-technical users is steeper than Zapier
- Complex scenarios can become visually cluttered
- Enterprise support is limited on lower tiers
Who should skip it: Teams that need enterprise-grade SLA guarantees, or organisations where non-technical users need to build their own automations independently.
Workato
Best for: mid-sized teams needing enterprise automation without Microsoft dependency
Workato is what Power Automate wants to be for enterprise use cases. The recipe builder is genuinely good — AI-assisted suggestions, reusable callable recipes, and a governance layer that IT teams actually appreciate. If your organisation was using Power Automate in combination with Azure Logic Apps for more complex orchestration, Workato can consolidate those into one platform.
The pricing is enterprise territory, but for a team of 50 to 500 people automating real business processes, it is often more cost-effective than Power Automate premium connectors plus the IT overhead to manage the platform.
Pros
- Enterprise-grade reliability and SLAs
- AI-assisted recipe building reduces build time
- Strong governance, audit logging, and role-based access
- Broad integration library including SAP, Salesforce, Workday
Cons
- Pricing starts in the thousands of dollars per year — not for small teams
- Implementation typically needs dedicated time or a partner
- Overkill for simple automation needs
Who should skip it: Small teams and freelancers — the pricing and complexity are only justified at meaningful organisational scale.
Tray.io
Best for: technical teams wanting enterprise-level flexibility
Tray.io sits between Make and Workato on the technical complexity scale. It is built for teams who want both a visual builder and the ability to drop into full code when needed. The connector library is extensive, and the platform handles high-volume, mission-critical workflows with enterprise-grade reliability.
Where Power Automate forces you into Microsoft's runtime and connector model, Tray gives you genuine flexibility on connectors and execution environment.
Pros
- Visual builder plus full-code capability in the same workflow
- Enterprise-grade reliability and compliance features
- Flexible connector model — connect to virtually any API
- Good for complex orchestration patterns across many systems
Cons
- Custom pricing means no transparent starting point without a sales call
- Requires technical capability to use effectively
- Implementation time is longer than Zapier or Make
Who should skip it: Teams without technical staff, or anyone who needs a quick solution without a sales process.
n8n
Best for: developer-led teams prioritising cost and control
n8n is the sharpest contrast to Power Automate's philosophy. Where Power Automate is a Microsoft product that assumes you live in Microsoft's cloud, n8n is open-source software you can run on any infrastructure — your own VPS, a Docker container, or n8n's cloud. The JavaScript code node means there is no transformation task you cannot accomplish.
For small technical teams that were using Power Automate primarily for cost reasons (because it was bundled with Microsoft 365), n8n's self-hosted version removes that cost argument while giving more flexibility.
Pros
- Self-hosted option is completely free
- JavaScript code nodes handle any transformation logic
- 400+ native integrations plus HTTP node for anything else
- Growing community and good documentation
Cons
- Self-hosting requires real DevOps effort to maintain reliably
- Not suitable for non-technical workflow owners
- Cloud version pricing is reasonable but not the cheapest if you count self-hosting effort
Who should skip it: Non-technical teams, or organisations where IT capacity to maintain self-hosted software does not exist.
How to Choose
The right Power Automate replacement depends on why you are leaving:
- Leaving because of non-Microsoft connector pain — Zapier or Make will both solve this immediately
- Leaving because the UI frustrates your ops team — Make's visual canvas is the biggest UX upgrade
- Leaving because enterprise features are missing — Workato or Tray.io
- Leaving to reduce costs — n8n self-hosted or Make on the free/starter tier
- Leaving because Power Automate is slow and unreliable on complex flows — Make or Workato
FAQ
Can I keep using Power Automate for SharePoint and switch everything else? Yes, and this is often a sensible hybrid approach. Power Automate's SharePoint triggers and actions are genuinely good. Keep those, and move non-Microsoft workflows to Zapier or Make.
Is Make actually comparable to Power Automate in enterprise reliability? For most small and mid-sized business workflows, yes. For mission-critical enterprise automation with SLA requirements, Workato or Tray.io are safer choices.
How much does Power Automate actually cost when you add premium connectors? Microsoft's licensing is complex — the per-user and per-flow plans add up quickly once you need premium connectors like Salesforce or DocuSign. Many teams discover their true Power Automate cost is significantly higher than they initially estimated when connectors are factored in.
Do any of these tools integrate with Microsoft 365 as well as Power Automate? Zapier and Make both have solid Microsoft 365 integrations covering Outlook, Teams, SharePoint, and OneDrive. They are not as deeply embedded as Power Automate, but for most automation use cases the coverage is sufficient.